Verifying backups

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Yes, when it comes to local copies cp is significantly faster than
rsync. Without --link-dest there isn't much advantage to using rsync
for backups. The only thing you get beyond cp -au is --delete.
Also, when it comes to static data like media files I like to keep an
md5 file around with checksums for all the files. That way I can
easily verify the files later on either the primary or backup storage
and more importantly if they differ I can tell which one is correct.
The cfv utility is great for file verifying. The -n option on it
tells it to rename incorrect files. Then you can just do a simple
rsync pass to delete the incorrectly named files and put back the now
missing files.
On 10/01/2015 01:53 AM, Perry Hutchison wrote:
> "Ronald F. Guilmette" <rfg at tristatelogic.com> wrote:
>>> P.S. I really do hope that I can get this to work with rsync. I
>> do prefer not reinventing the wheel, but it is starting to seem
>> simpler to me if I were to just write a Perl script that would
>> walk two directory hierarchies, in parallel, and just repeatedly
>> invoke the cmp command on all of the regular files found
>> therein.
>> Just because rsync is an awesome hammer, it does not necessarily
> follow that every problem involving backups closely resembles a
> nail :)
>> Since your source and backup are both local, I suspect using rsync
> as a comparison tool is overkill. (It may even be overkill for
> making the backups in the first place.) Had you considered "diff
> -q -r"?
>> $ mkdir one two $ echo hello > one/hello $ ln one/hello two/hello $
> echo different0 > one/foo $ echo different1 > two/foo $ diff -q -r
> one two Files one/foo and two/foo differ
>> or, if you prefer
>> $ diff -q -r -s one two Files one/foo and two/foo differ Files
> one/hello and two/hello are identical
>> (I'm using gnu diff; other variants might have different command
> options.)
>
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Kevin Korb Phone: (407) 252-6853
Systems Administrator Internet:
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